These photos were sent together as a postcard to voters during McCarthy's successful 1946 campaign for the Republican nomination to the U. S. Senate. The photos show (top) McCarthy as a Marine during World War II, (center) as a Circuit Court Judge, and (bottom) as a Marine intelligence officer. The back of the postcard carried the slogan "McCarthy for Senator."

Senator McCarthy, with his wife Jean and nephew Kelly Kornely, inspect the McCarthy homestead in the Town of Grand Chute, Wisconsin, in February, 1955. McCarthy purchased the house and 140-acre farm from his brother Howard, saying that he intended to make the farm his home.

Senator McCarthy feeds his daughter, Tierney Elizabeth, as his wife Jean looks on. The photo was taken a few hours after the McCarthys adopted the five-weeks-old child and brought her to their home in Washington, D. C., on January 13, 1957.

The flag-draped coffin containing the body of Senator McCarthy is carried up the steps of the U.S. Capitol for funeral services in the Senate chamber after an earlier service at St. Matthew's Cathedral, May 6, 1957.

The body of Senator McCarthy being carried into St. Mary Catholic Church, Appleton, Wisconsin, May 6, 1957. An honor guard of Appleton's Commodore John Barry Post, Catholic War Veterans, led the procession. Eight Marines carried the body as a 35-man honor guard stood in salute.

A large crowd stood outside St. Mary Catholic Church, Appleton, Wisconsin, as the casket of Senator McCarthy is removed from the church and placed in a hearse to begin the journey to the parish cemetery, May 7, 1957.

Jean McCarthy, the widow of Senator McCarthy, looks on as two honor Marine Corps guards unveil a bust of her husband in the Outagamie County Courthouse, May 2, 1959. Next to Mrs. McCarthy is Senator Styles Bridges (R-New Hampshire), who gave the dedication address to about 400 people gathered on the Courthouse lawn. Circuit Judge Andrew W. Parnell (right) served as chairman of the event. The Marines are Captain R. E. Jones (left) and First Sergeant Lawrence Sepulveda, both of Oshkosh.